Hershel Run, OH
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Belfast Road to Stonelick Creek
Class III-IV
1.35 Miles
Avg Gradient 145 fpm
Hershel Run ledge
Hershel Run ledgePhoto of Dave Heron by Eric Emerson taken March 12, 2006 @ 22"
River Description
In just two short years, things have changed in the Stonelick watershed.
The change is a terrible downward trend for paddlers. Due to the Bush Administration's Dirty Water Act uh, I mean Clean Water Act, the number of streams or rivers in Ohio which are deemed unsafe for fishing, boating, swimming and all other recreational activities has increased from 205 watersheds and 15 large rivers to 242 watersheds and 211 large rivers.
A tributary of Stonelick Creek which was one of the first of the steep creeks discovered in Southwest Ohio. Brandon Roy and I got the first descent on May 8, 1998. And if we would have run it with another six inches of water in it, we could've gotten in serious trouble. It was full of very bad strainers, and we ran it just above minimum. We cleared it out since then, only to have it fill up with wood even worse the next spring. Then it cleared out partially again naturally in the big spring 2003 flood. It is only 20-30 feet wide and twisting with ledges sometimes coming one right after the other. Things happen very quickly.
It is little, tight, and in southwestern Ohio terms, it's full on steep creekin'. It is almost 1 1/4 miles long and drops 180 feet. You put in and go through the tube under the road and over a 4 foot ledge. Then it's just easy downhill about 200 yards into strainers which may be boofed. Two huge trees (no limbs) lay across the creek but can be easily boofed at flows of two foot or more. Then it's boogie water for a ways. After this you will reach the first few ledges, which are fairly small.
The first big ledge you get to, Church Pew, is 5 feet, and once you get to it, all hell breaks loose. This ledge is likely to get very sticky at higher flows. Just below that it's one ledge or one downhill leaning rapid after another, with a tight s-turn and a long fast sluiceway thrown in. About 7 ledges in all, ending in a funky diagonal horseshoe shaped ledge.
Eddies are scarce. Some of these ledges contain some big, nasty sticky holes. Be prepared! and cautious. Right above the horseshoe ledge is the place that catches the worst strainers. Hopefully, this creek will be free of all strainers in the very near future. After that ledge, a 150 yard sluiceway / rockpile ledge rapid cranks downhill until you hit the second set of ledges. Along this section are three overhanging trees which you can get under at levels below 2 1/2 feet. Next up is the finale.
At one point you can see that in 100 yards there are 5 good ledges. The first two are small and easy. Then the next three are jammed together in a triple drop that goes from easy to intense pretty quick. 100 feet below is the biggest drop, a nice and nasty riverwide seven foot ledge that at high water has a keeper hydraulic. If you're going to run the big drop at levels around or over three feet, setting safety ropes would be a very good idea. The big ledge must be run against the right bank over a bad hole, so it's a real tough move. The run out is difficult to manuever also. It's real tight. Another ledge with a blue clay bottm is just around the bend and it has a bad hole. Then it's just 100 feet of boogie water and strainer debris to get you back to Stonelick Creek. Paddle across and take-out. Since Stonelick has plenty of water, might as well load up and go run it too. Of course, so does Brushy Fork. So run 'em both. I mean, you're already there.
StreamTeam Status: verified
Last Updated: 2006-07-21 01:33:28
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